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. 2015 Jun 18;7(11):1553–1561. doi: 10.4254/wjh.v7.i11.1553

Table 2.

Comparing various treatment strategies for hepatocellular carcinoma patients accompanying portal vein tumor thrombosis

Indication Advantages Disadvantages
Sorafenib BCLC stage C Showing survival benefit Modest efficacy compared to placebo control
in infiltrative type HCC Hand-foot skin reaction
TACE Nodular type HCC up to Vp4 Wide indication Post TACE syndrome
Child A liver function Potential risk of liver failure
TARE Tumor extension ≤ 50% of liver volume Down-staging allowing Requiring additional lung shunt study
Unilobar liver transplantation due to the risk of lung injury
Nodular type
Up to Vp4
RFA Single medium-sized HCCs (3-5 cm) Less invasive If the intraparenchymal tumor was not completely ablated by RFA, complete effects on the thrombus probably would not be produced
Surgery Up to Vp4 Less expensive technic Invasive and expensive technic
Single medium-sized HCCs (≤ 7 cm) Better outcomes than other patients Potential risk of liver failure
Up to Vp4 with HCC who are BCLC stage C
No HV/IVC invasion with Child A liver function
External beam AFP ≤ 30 ng/mL Combined to multimodal strategies Potential risk of radiation induced liver disease
radiotherapy Tumor extension ≤ 60% of liver volume Potential risk of GI tract toxicities

BCLC: Barcelona clinic liver cancer; HCC: Hepatocellular carcinoma; TACE: Transarterial chemoembolization; TARE: Transarterial radioembolization; RFA: Radiofrequency ablation; HV: Hepatic vein; IVC: Inferior vena cava; AFP: Alpha-fetoprotein; GI: Gastrointestinal.